
An- 



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II 
WBUMOMun 9 

013 74s 246 7 



O R ATIO N 



DELIVERED BY 



Gen. T. M. LOGAN, 



Reunion /•Hanpfoi X'cafii, 



IN COLUMBIA, S. C, 21ST JULY, 1875. 



PUBLISHED BY HIS FRIENDS IN CHARLESTON, S. C. 



CHARLESTON, S. C. 

WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL, PRINTERS, 

Nos. 3 Broad and 109 East Bay Streets. 

1875. 



ORATION 



DELIVERED BY 



Gen. T. M. LOGAN, 



REUNION OF THE HAMPTON LEGION. 



IN COLUMBIA, S. C, 21ST JULY.. 1875. 




PUBLISHED BY HIS FRIENDS IN CHARLESTON, S. C. 




CHARLESTON, S. C. 

WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL, PRINTERS, 

Nos. 3 Broad and 109 East Bay Streets." 

1875. 



INTRODUCTION 

OF 

GEN. T. M. LOGAN, 

BY 

GEN. WADE HAMPTON. 

AT THE REUNION IN COLUMBIA. 



It only remains for me to introduce to you Gen. T. M. 
Logan, who has been invited to address you on this occasion. 
Connected with the Legion from its organization to the close 
of its career, sharing in all its toils and dangers from Ma- 
nassas to Appomattox, and winning for himself, by distin- 
guished service on many a hard fought field, rank, fame, and 
the devoted attachment of his comrades, no one is better 
fitted to recount the deeds and represent the spirit of the 
Legion. 

SPEECH OF GEN. T. M. LOGAN. 

Gen. Logan having been introduced to the audience by 
Gen. Hampton, spoke as follows : 

It has been suggested by a distinguished author as a maxim 
of conduct, that man should dwell upon the hopeful and not 
the gloomy features of life ; and that he should, accordingly, 
cultivate the habit of discerning all that is pleasing and prom- 
ising in his condition and surroundings. The intellect, in 



directing our actions, must, of course, view everything dis- 
passionately, and should be guided only by the dictates of 
reason. But reason itself is often misled by the depressing 
influence of a morbid temperament, and the imagination, 
therefore, in presiding over the emotional nature, should 
always seek what is bright and cheerful, and feed only upon 
the promptings of hope. There is, unquestionably, much 
wisdom in this suggestion. Far more can be accomplished 
by us when we are hopeful, than when we are despondent, 
and the adoption of such a rule of conduct would accordingly 
result in practical benefits. 

In contemplating, then, upon this occasion, " The Future 
of the South," I may be pardoned for dwelling upon what 
may appear to some only " the bright lining of the ciouds." 
I believe there is much reason for encouragement. I may be 
mistaken, but it is at least gratifying to know that a hopeful 
view of the prospect can be discerned. We meet to-day to 
honor, cherish and preserve the memory of the past, and all 
in connection with it that is dear and sacred to us. It will be 
well for us if we can also look confidently to the future and 
be encouraged. We can thus best prepare ourselves for the 
duties and responsibilities which that future will devolve 
upon us — for 

" Hope, like the glimmering taper's light, 
Adorns and cheers the way ; 
And still, as darker grows the night, 
Emits a brighter ray." 

An eminent writer on social science has traced a most inter- 
esting and ingenious analogy between society, the body 
politic, and a living individual organism. He states many 
striking general peculiarities in which the body politic and 
the individual organism agree, and among others, that both 
of them, commencing from small aggregations, insensibly 
augment in mass ; that both of them, being at first simple in 
structure, assume, in the course of their respective growths, a 
continually increasing complexity of structure ; and that while 
at first there is scarcely any mutual dependence of parts, yet 



subsequently, as they develop, both are characterized by ex- 
treme dependence of parts, lie then explains many parallel- 
isms in detail, such as, for example, the correspondence 
between the arteries and veins of the individual organism, 
and the railroads and other highways of the body politic ; 
that between the nerves of the former and the telegraph lines 
of the latter, and many others equally curious and interesting. 
He uses this analogy to explain and illustrate the great politi- 
cal truth that society develops according to fixed laws, passing 
from the simple to the complex, from the homogeneous to the 
heterogeneous with as much unvarying certainty as in the case 
of living bodies. 

This analogy may always be used to advantage in discuss- 
ing social or political questions, and, if borne in mind, will 
aid in illustrating our subject on the present occasion. 

In considering, then, the future of the South, there is one 
fact suggested at the outset which has been demonstrated to 
us by the logic of events. It is, that under the operation of 
causes which, although unseen at the time, appear now to 
have been inevitable in their results, a vast social organism 
has been developed, and is now so far advanced in its growth 
as a national body politic, and no longer a mere aggregation of 
States, that unity is a necessity of its further development. 
In reviewing the past, we can now clearly see that this na- 
tional organism has been gradually developed, and while many 
seek by various theories to account for the failure of the Con- 
federacy, the result may be regarded as the necessary conse- 
quence of those laws of development under which this 
social organism — the United States — was being evolved. We 
had, in the language of Horace Greeley, " fought sternly 
against the inevitable; " but we could not prevail against 
''manifest destiny." We have accepted the result, and there 
is now nothing surer in the political world than that this 
country will continue in the future a united nation. Those 
causes which were too strong to be overcome by the courage 
and endurance of the Confederate soldier — even under the 
leadership of a Lee and a Jackson— still continue to operate, 



and are yearly gaining strength with the growth and develop- 
ment of the country; while those influences that heretofore, 
in the history of the world, have rendered it difficult for large 
territories to be controlled by one government, have ceased 
to exist since the introduction of steam locomotion and tele- 
graphic communication. 

The future is not for State, but for National develop- 
ment ; and we recognize the fact. Our feelings, as well 
as our interests, already incline us to strengthen and cement 
the bonds of real union by cultivating feelings of good 
will and friendship, and we are anxious to contribute our 
part to the growth, prosperity, and good government of 
the nation. The soldiers, as well of the North as of the 
South, have prepared the way for true reconciliation; and 
if it had been left to them, the animosities of the war 
would long since have been buried. The liberal sentiments 
of Bartlett and others would have restored amity and good 
feeling, and the whole country would have received a new 
impetus in its career of progress and prosperity. No section 
would have rejoiced in such a consummation more sincerely 
than the South, and no class of our people, North or South, 
now wish it more devoutly than the Confederate soldiers. 
We can now say in the language of the poet : 

" Our country ! lis a glorious land! 

With broad arms stretched from shore to shore, 

The proud Pacific chafes her strand, 

She hears the dark Atlantic roar ; 

Still may her flowers untrampled spring, 

Her harvests wave, her cities rise, 

And yet, till Time shall fold his wing, 

Remain earth's loveliest paradise." 

FUTURE PROSPERITY OF THE WHOLE COUNTRY. 

It requires neither prophet to foresee nor oracle to pro- 
nounce that there is a great future for the United States. 
Aside from the advantages of climate, soil and location, so 
frequently alluded to, but certainly not exaggerated, there 



are many reasons for congratulation when we compare the^ 
condition of our country with that of the great powers o 
Europe. Prominent among these may be mentioned our 
relief from the necessity of maintaining immense standing- 
armies. This is the great burden that now weighs upon and 
oppresses the nations of Europe, and, like a pall, casts a 
shadow of gloom over their aspirations and prosperity. We 
can readily appreciate the depressing effect of the conscrip- 
tion laws on the youth of Germany and France, and at all 
events how intolerable the grievance would be to the Ameri- 
can people ; but it requires some familiarity with the facts 
and figures to realize the enormous tax such armies impose 
on a country's resources. The tendency is towards an aggra- 
vation of the evil. All Germany is now a camp, and there 
is necessarily a corresponding armament of the other great 
powers. England alone — thanks to her isolated position and 
naval power— is somewhat relieved from this necessity of 
enrolling her entire arms-bearing population. The exemption 
of the United States from this evil, the bane of European 
nations, is sufficient of itself to ensure her a controlling 
advantage in the race for material progress with the rival 
nations of the earth. And yet this is only one of many 
privileges and immunities peculiar to America. Again, if 
vigor, energy and vitality are promoted, as we are told, by 
the mixture of blood of different nations of the same race (the 
reverse being the case as between races,) then should the 
inhabitants of this country excel in those qualities, and the 
distinctive people that must be the outcome in the future of 
this social fusion, should be of the highest type of man, 
inheriting the various talents and aptitudes peculiar to the 
several nations from which it sprung. Truly, a vast empire 
is in progress of formation. Its increase in population and 
wealth has already been unprecedented. It is not dependent 
on its own natural growth, for almost every civilized 
country of the world is tributary to its development. Its 
history during the past century is one of the wonders of the 
age, and the same influences and causes that have operated 



so auspiciously in the past arc still at work. It is only in its 
youth — in the vigor of early manhood, with a nation's life- 
time before it for development. We will then unquestionably 
have on this continent "a great country inhabited by a great 
people." But we are more immediately concerned as to the 
future of our own section — more interested in considering 
whether the South will share in this greatness and prosperity. 

The radical change in our industrial system has resulted 
necessarily in a corresponding change in the habits of our 
people. The social environment has been suddenly modified, 
and it is a question of vital interest whether the effect on 
the social organism will be advantageous, or the reverse. 
Such a revolution in our system of labor must necessarily 
produce important changes in the society, and we are deeply 
concerned in knowing whether, upon the whole, the result 
will be progress or decline. 

Whatever may be our views of those bitter experiences, 
which, under the iron, rule of war, have left us in our present 
condition, and however much we may regret that we were 
not permitted to work out for ourselves our own future, and 
to have thus avoided the terrible effects of forced and arbi- 
trary changes of our institutions and habits ; yet, taking the 
facts as they now exist, an unprejudiced consideration of the 
subject unquestionably justifies the opinion that our capacity 
for progress has been increased, and that the present oppor- 
tunities for developing our resources are greater than were 
possible under the old regime. The material resources of the 
South had been developed to a very limited extent, as com- 
pared with her population and wealth, and hence we have 
always been, in this respect, the most helpless and dependent 
people of the civilized world. It is conceded that the greatest 
source of weakness to the Confederate cause was the inad- 
equacy of the material and supplies of war for the numbers 
enrolled in our armies. We were stronger in every other 
respect. There was, of course, much to admire in the refine- 
ment and culture of Southern society before the war, but 
there was little opportunity for that rapid increase of popula- 







tion and general diffusion of wealth, so characteristic of the 
North. Our people relied almost exclusively on agricul- 
ture, but the people of the North, besides tilling the ground, 
directed their attention and energies to commerce and manu- 
factures — those other handmaids of prosperity. The yearly 
increase of population and wealth in the Northern States, 
accordingly, far exceeded that in the Southern States ; and 
while at the first census the population of the South repre- 
sented one-half of the total population of the country, in 
i860 it was less than one-third. The population of the great 
State of Virginia, in the early days of the Republic, almost 
equalled that of any two Northern States, while in i860 she 
ranked fifth on the census list, and averaged only twenty-six 
(26) persons to the square mile, whereas Massachusetts aver- 
aged one hundred and fifty-seven (157.) Our material pro- 
gress, then, from year to year, was not what it should have 
been ; and in that respect the result was a continuous loss of 
power and influence upon the part of the South. This fact 
is indisputable, whatever the causes may have been ; and it 
is useless now to inquire whether it was the result of false 
statesmanship and an unfortunate prejudice against commerce 
and manufactures, or the effect of our peculiar institutions. 
The causes, however, no longer exist ; and our present con- 
dition and opportunities are such as should ensure us, if true 
to ourselves and to the lessons of the past, our full share of 
prosperity. The losses, hardships and sufferings that have 
befallen our people are well calculated to make them appre- 
ciate now the importance of developing all our resources, 
and will no doubt educate them not only to realize the neces- 
sity of labor, in ail its forms, as the means of material success, 
but also to honor it as an essential condition of social pro- 
gress. There could be no better schooling for our people in 
this respect than their recent experiences, and they already 
understand, in all its force, the true meaning (as well as the 
philosophy) of the Divine decree, " By the sweat of thy brow 
thou shalt earn thy bread." It is an interesting fact, in this 
connection, said to be established by statistics, that the health 



1(1 



of colonists in hot climates is in direct proportion to their 
habits of industry. Those colonists, for example, who labor 
habitually, secure health as nature's reward for their work, 
and leave a hardy progeny behind them to inhabit and pos- 
sess the land; while those who are inert, or whose habits of 
life are sedentary, are more subject to disease, and transmit 
to their descendants enfeebled constitutions as nature's curse 
for the violation of her law. 

" Cheered with the view man went to till the ground 
From whence he rose; sentenced, indeed, to toil, 
As to a punishment; yet (e'en in wrath 
So merciful is Heaven,) this toil became 
The solace of his woes, the sweet employ 
Of many a livelong hour, and surest guard 
Against disease and death." 

The ordeal, it is true, to which our people have been sub- 
jected, has been a trying one. The sorrows and horrors of war 
were exceeded by the evils of reconstruction, which under 
the humiliating tyranny of corrupt officials, surpassed any- 
thing that was ever before inflicted upon a people of the same 
culture and civilization ; and there is nothing which we have 
to deplore more bitterly than the effect upon those who were 
unable, from age, to accommodate themselves to the new cir- 
cumstances, or to change, with impunity, their fixed habits. 
The young can change their mode of life as may be neces- 
sary, and can meet and outlive losses and troubles, but this is 
rarely possible with those advanced in years. How many 
of our most respected and honored have succumbed to un- 
told trials, losses, and humiliations, who would otherwise 
have lived to a good old age. This is, indeed, one of the 
saddest features of the sad picture, and should be included 
with those memories of the past that claim our deepest sym- 
pathy. 

PERMANENCY OF OUR REPUBLICAN INSTITUTIONS. 

In the further consideration of our subject it may be neces- 
sary to meet the objection, that the recent tendency to cen- 
tralization will end in Imperialism, or permanent Democratic 



11 



absolutism; and that accordingly the future of our republican 
government is uncertain. There is, however, no just cause 
for apprehension. The American people will neither be de- 
frauded of their " inheritance of liberty," nor forcibly de- 
prived of it. They are too intelligent to be deluded, and too 
brave to be overawed. The passions and prejudices of the. 
hour may temporarily cloud the truth, but the sunshine of 
returning reason will soon dissipate the mists, and public 
opinion will again be heard on the side of constitutional gov- 
ernment. The Republic has been termed " an experiment ;" 
but it has now weathered the political storms of almost a cen- 
tury, and the people are not only fully imbued with the spirit 
of freedom, and deeply attached to their institutions, but what 
is equally important, they have become habituated to self-gov- 
ernment. The idea of any coup d'etat being successful, there- 
fore, in this country, with a people accustomed to liberty, is, of 
course, preposterous ; for if Csesarism had been possible with 
us, it was only so through the votes of the people themselves, 
who, if untrue to their Anglo-Saxon instincts, might have been 
tempted into the support of their successful soldier from his 
popularity as the so-called " Saviour of the Republic." This 
danger, however, if it ever existed, as so many thought, is 
certainly past;. for the people have spoken in words that can- 
not be misconstrued on the "Third Term " question. The 
reconstruction measures, it is true, were not only oppressive 
and tyrannical, conceived in hate and born in iniquity, but 
they resulted from a gross and unscrupulous abuse of povver 
bya radical faction, whose legislation was a disgrace to Amer- 
ican self-government, and ill comports with the liberal and 
advanced views that should have characterized the American 
people, claiming, as they do, to teach and to lead the world 
in the art of free government. We should not, however, hold 
the people responsible. They were misled by corrupt party 
leaders, who relied upon the war prejudices to prolong their 
term of power. It is not surprising, then, under the circum- 
stances, that the voice of reason was temporarily hushed, 
and that it should have required almost ten years for North- 



12 



ern voters to understand the facts as they existed at the 
South, and to realize the enormities and wrongs that had been 
practiced on our people under the reconstruction Acts of 
Congress. The truth was, however, (thanks to the independ- 
ent press,) at last understood at the North ; and we have the 
best evidence in the vote which was polled at the elections 
last fall, that the masses are really " true at heart." This vote 
should restore confidence in the American people, if the ex- 
cesses of the preceding decade had destroyed it. Calhoun, 
one of the wisest as well as purest of statesmen, regarded 
civil war as the severest test to which our Republican form of 
government could be subjected. His apprehension was that 
the leader of the victorious section would become the despot 
of both sections. As our institutions have now survived this 
ordeal, under the most trying circumstances, we should have 
greater confidence in their stability. The war prejudices are 
at last buried; the "bloody chasm" is finally bridged ; and 
all the dark clouds that lowered over us have entirely disap- 
peared from our political sky. 

It is further true, the government has become consoli- 
dated; yet it is still essentially decentralized, certainly so 
as compared with French or Continental centralism. With 
the growth and development of the country, there was 
necessarily the usual change from the homogeneous to 
the heterogeneous, from the simple to the complex, from 
the weak and purely Federal Republic of the past to the 
strong and powerful Nation of to-day. But this was 
only in accordance with the law of progress itself, and 
arose from the necessity of the case, in the growth of the 
" social organism." The country has passed from the condi- 
tion of a small confederacy of States, representing a few mil- 
lions of people, to that of a great nation. It has become one 
of the first powers of the world, and at the present rate of 
increase, her population will exceed before the close of the 
century one hundred millions. We cannot have the pure 
Federalism of Jefferson ; but this should cause no apprehen- 
sion, if the present limits of national authority be not exceeded. 



L3 



We can still have constitutional government. A strong form of 
government does not necessarily preclude local self-govern- 
ment, for there is no real incompatibility between the two. 
While we cannot, therefore, ever expect again the extreme of 
" States Rights," we may, nevertheless, enjoy all the blessings 
of local control over local interests by reconciling national au- 
thority with " States Rights " principles ; and it is probable 
that the present revulsion against the centralizing policy of the 
Republican party will result in the recognition of all constitu- 
tional restrictions, and check any tendency to further consolida- 
tion. 

Upon the whole, there is much that is promising in the 
political outlook for the cause of free government, and it 
probably stands to-day upon a surer basis than ever before in 
the history of the world ; and I would add, in the language 
of the immortal bard : 

" Doubt not but success 



Will fashion the event in better shape, 
Than I can lay it down in likelihood." 

But furthermore, as in the physical world every change in 
the natural environment is followed, we are told, by corres- 
ponding changes in the fauna and flora ; so, in the moral 
world, gradual changes in the social environment are fol- 
lowed by corresponding changes in the social organism. 
While, therefore, development and growth in the advance of 
civilization frequently produce changes that would be danger- 
ous, would be perilous, if society remained otherwise the 
same, yet these very changes become sources of progress and 
improvement when, in analogy to what is observed in natural 
history, corresponding changes occur in the very fabric of 
society, adapting it to the new circumstances. The operation 
of this law can be discerned in the history of free government 
in this country. While, as we have seen, by the force of 
circumstances, our simple Federal Republic has become a 
strong nation, and, as compared with the States, necessarily 
clothed with controlling powers, such indeed as would have 



u 



been regarded by our earlier statesmen as fatal and destruc- 
tive ; yet at the same time corrective and harmonizing agen- 
cies have been developed, which supply adequate coun- 
teracting influences, and I hesitate not to affirm that the 
equilibrium will be preserved and the resultant be real 
progress. 

To illustrate as well as to sustain this position, we may cite 
the increased influence of public opinion over the government 
since the introduction of railroads and telegraph lines — 
those two great adjuncts to the printing press in diffusing 
knowledge. They not only facilitate the transmission of 
information, but they bring the citizens of all sections into 
direct and immediate communication with each other, if not 
into personal conference. While the government then has 
become more consolidated, public opinion has also become 
more consolidated. While the simple Federal Republic has 
become a strong nation, comparatively centralized, the "anni- 
hilators of time and space" have also been introduced ; and 
public opinion, susceptible now of rapid concentration by the 
telegraph and the railroad, is too strong to be ignored. The 
arteries and veins of the social organism now permeate the 
entire system, and distribute and diffuse throughout all parts 
the annual products of industry — the blood of the corporate 
existence ; while its magnetic nerves, flashing from all points 
the alarms of evil or the tidings of good, bind the whole 
together in sympathy — -a conscious " thing of life." What is 
it? It is the expanding form of freedom's empire — the hope 
of man. It is the living, growing body politic, in which 
throbs the great American heart with its unbounded aspira- 
tions for progress. Its soul is the genius of humanity ; while 
the collective human mind, finding its expression through 
public opinion, presides over and protects it. Such is the 
last born of civilization, a child of the new world, nurtured 
and reared by the Goddess of Liberty. 

Observe also the increased influence of the " Free Press" — 
so aptly termed the " Fourth Estate" in politics. In the early 
history of journalism the newspaper was generally forced, 



15 



from pecuniary necessity, to become the organ of some party, 
individual, or particular interest ; but to-day the leading jour- 
nals of the country— those entitled to the proud distinction of 
the " Independent Press" — are sustained by Sample patron- 
age of the reading and business public, and are relieved from 
the necessity or the temptation of courting pecuniary support 
from any particular source. They are independent pecunia- 
rily as well as in principle, and cannot afford to be subsidized. 
They are not expounders only of public opinion, but to a 
certain extent they seek to form and lead it, and even when 
supporting a political party they can be so far unpartizan as 
to repudiate party measures, which they do not approve. 
They are really seekers after truth, refusing to prostitute 
their columns for advocating specific objects. As there is 
necessarily talent and ability connected with their manage- 
ment, they are competent, as well as disinterested advisers 
upon all questions that arise. On the average, therefore, the 
independent press will be found on the side of truth, justice 
and right ; on the whole, as the political mentor, will enlighten, 
elevate and purify the public conscience. 

We had a practical demonstration of the influence which 
the free press now wields as the " fourth estate " in the 
social economy, in what was accomplished by the " great 
dailies," during last year, in investigating and reporting, 
through the'r special correspondents, the real condition of 
affairs in the South. After ascertaining the truth, they fear- 
lessly and actively proclaimed it; thus battling earnestly 
for right and justice against prevailing prejudices, and against 
the policy of the party in power. The respectable journals 
of the country in consequence were soon engaged, with a 
few exceptions, in exposing the fraud of alleged " Ku-klux 
outrages," and in denouncing the corruptions of carpet-bag 
misrule. The result was as beneficial to the cause of good 
government and freedom in the South, as the rebuke to the 
party which had tolerated such abuses was prompt and 
emphatic at the polls ; while the course pursued so earnestly 
and impartially by the enterprising journals which originated 



10 

the movement will be valuable as an example, and is most 
auspicious of the future influence of the press. As, then, 
the influence of the Central Government increased, the de- 
centralizing influence of the press also increased; as the evil 
was developed, an ample corrective, the " fourth estate," was 
evolved. And while the vast patronage and power now 
attaching to the National Government would have been re- 
garded formerly as inevitably subversive of our institutions ; 
yet we have no such apprehensions, because an active, fear- 
less and powerful independent press is now always ready 
(and is able) to attack and expose corruption, and to sound 
the alarm and arouse the people at the first indication of 
danger. It should not be overlooked that the trying ordeals, 
to which constitutional government has been subjected du- 
ring the past ten years* have been surmounted while the 
South was practically without influence in directing the policy 
of the administration. The Southern people had always 
been conservative, opposing every encroachment of national 
authority, and thus exerted a restraining influence over the 
centralizing tendency of the North. The habits, aims and 
aspirations of the Northern people, on the other hand, 
looked to the rapid accumulation of wealth and the in- 
crease of population, and they naturally desired a strong 
central government. We can well understand how the result- 
ant of these opposing tendencies might have been a happy 
equilibrium along a line of progress between the two extremes. 
Changes would have been introduced gradually following 
the example of time, " which indeed innovateth greatly, but 
slowly ;" and we would thus have secured a national govern- 
ment which, recognizing fully the local rights of the States 
and the freedom of the individual, would, at the same time, 
have been sufficiently strong to protect the varied commercial 
and other interests of a rapidly increasing population. In 
the absence, however, for ten years of the restraining influ- 
ence of the South, it is not surprising, under the circumstan- 
ces, that the equilibrium was temporarily destroyed. But the 
dangers were at last appreciated by the North, and the 



reaction of public opinion became so great as even in Massa- 
chusetts to hurl the Republican party from power. The 
South is now again on a footing of equality, and in any 
future struggles against the abuse of power or against a tend- 
ency to imperialism her conservative influence will be availa- 
ble, and may be relied on. What the whole country now 
needs, so far as her material prosperity is concerned, is : 
that the South, on the one hand, should acquire some of the 
characteristic thrift and business energy of the North; should 
build up her cities by manufactures and commerce ; should 
populate, improve and cultivate her waste districts ; should 
open and operate her mines ; and should, in short, develop 
as rapidly as possible all her material resources ; while the 
Northern people, recollecting that " eternal vigilance is the 
price of liberty," should on their part check any further tend- 
ency to centralization, whether in the executive, legislative, 
or judicial departments. While we should study more the 
science and art of wealth, they should study more the science 
and art of government. 

Corrupt administrations in some of the Southern States, 
and the demoralizing influence of adventurers and office- 
seekers over our colored laborers, may continue to depress 
business and enterprise, but there is now reason for believing 
that these blighting influences will be only temporary. The 
future of the negro in the South, as a voter and citizen, is an 
interesting subject of vital importance; but it involves a 
problem which time alone can solve. We can, however, at 
least see the beginning of the end ; for already " the grey- 
eyed morn smiles on the frowning night." Wherever the 
whites have the majority in the South, the negro — no longer 
the active politician — has proved himself a quiet, peaceable, 
and well-disposed citizen. As a laborer, we need him, and in 
this capacity he will be invaluable. Nor need he be, because 
of an inferior race, an incubus upon the South, as some 
would have us believe. If the Southern people were left to 
themselves, without further interference in this matter by 
Federal'legislation, or otherwise, there would be no trouble 
2 



18 



between the races, and the colored man, no longer influenced 
and deluded by adventurers, would become a contented and 
faithful laborer. In the meantime, the whites should appre- 
ciate the position of the misguided race and be scrupulously 
just and kind to it. 

Upon the whole, then, so far as opportunity and circum- 
stances are concerned, the South is in a position to reap her 
full share of the prosperity and progress of the country in 
the future. Our people, however, must fully realize their con- 
dition, as well as their opportunities. They must cultivate 
habits of steady industry, and raise their children to work. 

The influence and ability of Southern statesmen before the 
war are matters of history. They controlled the country 
until i860. The South has still the same talent, the same 
culture, and the same genius for statesmanship ; and although 
it may be true that individuals cannot in the future wield the 
direct influence that they have exerted in the past, yet genius 
will still be potent in shaping that public opinion of the 
masses which is now the " power in politics." The first 
talent of the South, before the war, naturally sought public 
life as the field for distinction, and the genius of the South 
was thus concentrated almost exclusively in her statesman- 
ship, (the demand, in the irrepressible conflict for what she 
deemed self-preservation creating the supply.) She excelled 
in statesmanship, and, if the same talent and genius be de- 
voted now to other occupations, she will also excel in litera- 
ture, science and the arts of life. 

It is vitally important, in this connection, that our people 
be educated. Knowledge is power, as regards communities 
as well as individuals. While the culture and education of 
the higher classes of Southern society have been unequalled 
in any other section of the country, our opportunities for 
public instruction have been limited. It is more important 
now than ever that this should be corrected. Aside from 
other considerations, we cannot expect to compete with our 
friends at the North in the race for wealth and progress, un- 
less the masses of our people are equally well educated. And 



1!» 



in considering the future of our now impoverished South, 
there is probably no clearer question of policy than that of 
sustaining the public schools. Any appropriations made for 
this purpose will ultimately prove the most profitable of all 
investments. 

A new century of union, progress, and prosperity is now 
being ushered in under the harmonizing auspices of the Cen- 
tennial celebrations ; and the people of the two sections are 
vieing with each other in their offerings of local prejudices 
as sacrifices upon the altars of fraternity and friendship. 
This spirit of reconciliation, aided by the sacred and ennobling 
memories of the earlier days, has awakened new hopes for a 
common future, and promises to restore reunion in feeling as 
well as in form. Mutual concession and forbearance have 
already accomplished much, by arousing a common sympathy 
in these associations of the past ; but permanent reconcilia- 
tion and true friendship must be based on mutual respect 
and equality, and if we would reap the full fruits of these 
auspicious celebrations we should, in a broad spirit of mag- 
nanimity, mutually recognize and acknowledge what each 
section, in its peculiar province, has accomplished for the 
common good. 

The North has led in the physical world — in the material 
development of the country ; the South has concentrated her 
best energies in the moral world — in seeking to realize her 
ideals of true manhood, broad and pure statesmanship, and 
high public character. 

The success of the earlier efforts of the one soon placed the 
country on the highest pinnacle of material greatness — as 
first in the world in intelligence, enterprise and energy ; and 
we were all proud of the result. 

The success of the earlier efforts of the other soon impressed 
itself upon the free institutions of the country, through her 
Jeffersons, her Madisons, and her Marshalls, her Rutledges, 
her Laurenses, and her Pinckneys ; and as the personified 
product of her highest aspirations, the South gave to the 
common country the exalted character of Washington. 



20 



But this additional bond of union and of friendship, in the 
mutual recognition of contributions to the country's great- 
ness, need not be limited to those earlier days. We of the 
South fully appreciate the unbounded resources and material 
power that have been developed in these later years by North- 
ern intelligence, energy and enterprise; and we recognize that 
these have demonstrated to the world that republicanism, with 
its unfettered liberty of action, promotes intelligence, stimu- 
lates industry, produces unrivalled prosperity, and at the 
same time ensures unequalled power in war. This was ex- 
hibited in the conflict between the States. But fully apprecia- 
ting what has been achieved by Northern skill, energy and 
industry, we claim that the South has displayed in that same 
struggle a morale, a will and a force of character of which any 
people may justly be proud ; and that she has accordingly 
demonstrated to the world that republicanism can also develop 
the highest moral qualities. And the adherence of our peo- 
ple to their plighted faith, given when finally overpowered 
(although not defeated), is equally precious as an exhibition 
of public honor that has never been surpassed. The same 
character, the same devotion to duty and to principle which 
sustained them in prolonging the struggle against unparalleled 
odds, removed all armed disaffection after their word had 
been given to resist no longer, and ensured also the sacred 
observance of their troth. 

At the great Centennial, then, at Philadelphia, for which 
these lesser celebrations are preparing us all, we expect to 
see a people represented, who, unprejudiced by local influ- 
ences or sectional feeling, will appreciate true greatness under 
whatever circumstances it may have been displayed. And 
while we of the South shall recognize and be proud of the 
amazing industrial and intellectual achievements of the North, 
which shall there be represented, we shall also be justly proud 
of what the South can offer to represent her achievements 
for the common country's greatness. Her material offerings' 
will be poor; but as in the earlier days the South gave to the 
country her best contributions in the wisdom, the virtue, and 



21 



the valor of her sous; so in these later Centennial days she 
can refer to the recent achievements of her sons as indicating 
the valor and heroism which may be relied upon whenever 
needed in the country's defence. She can refer to their high 
sense of honor, recently exhibited, as an earnest of fidelity to 
that Union which they have now accepted as their own. She 
can confidently refer to both as indicating the high moral 
worth which she contributes to the country's welfare and 
renown. And it is the consciousness of this which places her 
sons around these Centennial altars, not conquered and 
crushed, but proud and erect, recognized equals and peers. 
And as in the earlier days she also gave to the nation and to 
the world her Washington, representing all the virtue and 
the valor which she aspired to; so in these later days, when 
material development — physical grandeur — threatens to 
eclipse and overshadow moral development — moral grandeur 
— she can tender, as her best gift to the country and to the 
world, the exalted and majestic character of her Lee, as per- 
sonifying and embodying her highest aspirations for true 
greatness. 

The South has not heretofore devoted due attention to 
material development; but circumstances are changed, and 
in that " maddening career of worldly progress" which she, 
too, is now entering, we should beware of overlooking the 
value of moral worth. There is something to be cultivated 
by a people far more important than physical progress, with- 
out which no national prosperity can be real or permanent. 
As the eloquent Charming has told us : " The great distinction 
of a nation — the only one worth possessing, and which brings 
after it all other blessings — is the prevalence of a pure prin- 
ciple among the citizens." This is the first essential of a coun- 
try's greatness, and in the narrie of a common country's 
welfare we should all, in these latter days of worldly progress, 
unite in urging the importance of cultivating and cherishing 
a high moral tone — -purity, as well as force of public character. 



CONCLUDING ADDRESS TO THE SOLDIERS. 

Before concluding the task assigned me at this, our first 
reunion, permit me to advert briefly to a k\v features of our 
Confederate struggle, which have not yet received that prom- 
inence in public estimation to which their importance entitle 
them. While the military genius of our commanders, and 
the courage and dash of our troops are universally conceded, 
the individuality which peculiarly distinguished the Confed- 
erate soldier is generally overlooked. It has no parallel on 
so grand a scale in military history, and was decidedly the 
most remarkable characteristic of our armies. It has pro- 
duced a marked impression in military circles abroad, if it has 
not already caused something of a revolution in tactics. This 
same individuality, which changes the battalion from a mere 
machine into an aggregate of intelligent thinking units, has 
been of late diligently cultivated in the Prussian system, and 
is fully appreciated by the German commanders. The idea 
no longer prevails, as it did formerly, that all independence of 
action in the soldier should be drilled out of him ; for the 
brilliant Confederate victories achieved by this individuality 
of the rank and file has taught the world its value. 

The use of temporary and hastily constructed earthworks 
in the field — to supply the deficiency of numbers — was another 
equally striking feature of our Confederate tactics. Only a 
few occasions are reported on which a similar system had 
b • en regularly adopted previously, and its value in an active 
campaign had never been duly recognized. Its wonderful 
success in the campaign from the Wilderness to Petersburg, 
demonstrated that brave troops under a skilful leader can 
always remain in the field against at least two or three times 
their number, and certainly should not be forced into fortifi- 
cations and surrounded. Lee, although vastly outnumbered 
in this campaign, repulsed every attack of his persistent 
opponent, a single rank of his half-fed, half-clad heroes hurl- 
ing back repeated assaults of heavy columns; while in the 
campaigns of Sedan, Metz, and Paris, armies equal in num- 



23 



bers to those of the Germans were actually surrounded and 
forced to surrender by the Prussian commanders. Think of 
Lee with anything approaching equality of numbers being 
surrounded ! Impossible, so long as a few spadefuls of earth 
could be thrown up along the front, and the line thus almost 
indefinitely extended. I venture the assertion, that in defen- 
sive warfare Lee has never been excelled, if he has ever had 
his equal in the annals of the worl.d's history, and that his 
brave veterans behind temporary field works were more nearly 
invincible to an attack upon their front than was ever any 
army of which history gives us an account. 

Again, as regards the cause itself for which our comrades 
offered up their lives, we should never admit that it involved 
a useless sacrifice. Far otherwise ! Every instinct of honor 
and manhood upon the facts presented required the effort. 
We were overpowered by superior numbers and resources ; 
but we did our duty, and good must ever result from duty 
faithfully performed. We have at least recorded upon the 
pages of history in undying colors of blood a people s Protest 
against interference in popular governments with the consti- 
tutional rights of the minority. It is a protest which will be 
respected, for it was earnest, determined, and grand. 

We should ever bear in mind the distinction between prin- 
ciples, and the issues that may from time to time be raised in 
their defence. Principles are based upon truth, justice and 
right, and consequently are eternal. Issues that may be 
raised and joined under the banner of a principle are based 
upon expediency — upon the adopted policy of the hour — 
change with circumstances, and are in any event temporary 
and evanescent. 

Principles are affected neither by success nor by failure, 
being above the accidents of time and circumstance. Issues 
stand or fall according to their success or failure, and are 
judged solely by the rule of " might." 

The issue, upon which our Confederate conflict was joined, 
was secession, and the arbitrament of the sword decided 
against it ; but local self-government was the principle for 



24 



which we fought. This principle is freedom, is liberty 
itself, and is as right, as true, as eternal as that principle 
of allegiance for which the North contended. The result 
then condemned, according to recognized rules, the 
issue— the policy of secession— but affects not the sacred 
principle for which that issue was made. The issue was 
forced upon us, in our judgment, by the attack of a minority 
>n against our local rights; and although the majority at 
the North discountenanced this threatened attack, yet when 
the i ession was made by the South, the spirit of 

loyalty was aroused at the North. Their people condemned 
the issue of secession, and against it they united, under the 
principle of allegiance. While, then, all recognize the issue 
of secession as finally disposed of, the people of the North, 
as well as those of the South, revere and cherish the ever- 
living principle of freedom which inspired us in the contest ; 
and it is the mutual recognition of these two principles — 
freedom and allegiance — under whose respective banners the 
sections were arrayed, that furnished the basis of that 
enlarged spirit of reconciliation which now pervades the 
country. 

And so it has ever been in the history of the Anglo-Saxon 
race. Allegiance and freedom are principles equally sacred, 
and have both been at times the battle cry of true patriot- 
ism. John Hampden and his followers, inspired by the call 
of freedom, appealed to force to establish their principles ; 
and they made the issue of armed resistance to royalty. The 
cavaliers, inspired by allegiance, supported royalty, not to 
uphold the abuse of the King's authority, but to uphold the 
principle of loyalty to their recognized sovereign ; but they 
raised the false issue of non-resistance to royalty. Success 
at first crowned the revolution and the commonwealth of 
Cromwell was established; but success added nothing to the 
principle, which would have been as true, as sacred, if defeat 
had resulted ; and it was equally true, equally sacred, after the 
restoration, when royalty was re-established. We all know 
the history of the issues that were joined from time to time 



•J.-) 



Success 



under the inspiration of these respective principles. 

first smiled on the one, and then on the other, and the 

final result was the reconciliation of both in a constitutional 

monarchy. 

We acted then conscientiously. We believed that the cause 
of local self-government was endangered, and we appealed to 
the god of battles. Principle we thought required it, and for 
principle was the issue made. We were crushed ; but the 
struggle, I repeat, was not in vain. The result demonstrated 
that secession was not the doctrine for America ; but repub- 
lican institutions and self-government are still ours, and the 
sacrifices and losses we have sustained will be recognized 
hereafter even by the North as having been offered at the 
shrine of freedom ; while the blood which has flowed so lav- 
ishly will consecrate the land in the eyes of posterity as 
hallowed ground, where true patriotism, valor and unexampled 
devotion to duty, united a people in a heroic struggle for 
right against might — for what they believed to be the cause 
of liberty. 

And now, fellow-soldiers, in organizing our Association, let 
us be equal to the trust we are assuming. We honor the 
memory of our departed brothers for their valor ; we honor 
their memories still more for the virtue of which that valor 
was only the outward expression. We are proud of their 
courage ; we are proud of their heroism ; we are prouder still 
of their true patriotism, of their self-denial, and of \X\c\x faith- 
fulness to duty which kept them always at the post of danger. 
Their memories then should ever admonish us of our duties 
in the living present, and arouse us to act our part faithfully 
in peace as they did in war. We cannot avoid associating 
the idea of duly performed, as well as that of heroic courage, 
with the names of our departed heroes. 

And passing from our own loved ones to those great chief- 
tains, the custody of whose memories belongs to the entire 
South, it is a peculiar satisfaction to know that the influence of 
their bright examples will be invaluable to their countrymen. 
The character of a people is always largely shaped by that 
3 



26 

of their great leaders, whose moral qualities insensibly stamp 
themselves upon their youthful admirers. Hence it is one of 
I [eaven's richest blessings to a country, that the lives of her 
illustrious heroes be pure and ennobling, as well as brilliant 
and grand. 

The South has been peculiarly blessed in this respect. If 
it was not inappropriate to the occasion, I could instance the 
highest specimens oi true manhood among those of our living 
Confederates whose names are household words ; and I need 
not go far to find the peer of any knight who ever broke a 
lance in a holy cause, whose valor, whose honour, whose 
unspotted moral character, whose culture and true refinement 
are as well known and appreciated as his brilliant military 
career. Ranked immediately after Lee and Jackson as the 
great cavalry leader of the war, he now stands among the 
foremost in renown of living Confederates. To describe him 
thus is to name him — our own great chief, Wade Hampton. 

When we pass to the contemplation of our departed heroes 
there are two whose names are enrolled on the highest tablets 
of fame, who appear as pre-eminent for their virtue as for 
their valor, for their moral and religious worth as for their 
martial fame. No people can exhibit higher types of charac- 
ter than those of Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee. 

Jackson was emphatically the hero of our struggle, beloved 
and admired by all. His military genius was only equalled 
by the unbounded confidence of the army in his invincibility. 
1 [e was taken from us in the very noondayblaze of his glory — 
triumphant and victorious in his last flank movement. His 
brilliant, although short, career has impressed his followers 
and the world with the power and grandeur of genius when 
guided by deep religious principle. He was spared the last 
test to which the great Lee was subjected. It was the fate of 
I to survive the shock of battles, and after furnishing us an 
example of what is due to his afflicted country by the soldier, 
when overpowered and crushed, he has left us a character 
pure, exalted and grand, to be loved, admired and revered. 

I will not speak on this occasion of his genius as a great 
captain, but prefer to allude to him in his still greater char- 



/ 



> 
27 



acter as a true, noble man. Lee, as the successful general, the 
victor of many hard fought fields, is great; but Lee, as the 
true Christian, the pure, unselfish man, seeking the path of 
duty and following it, whether in the hour of triumph, or in 
the day of disaster, is greater still. Lee, with the flush of vic- 
tory upon him, as he is portrayed by the artist, mounted on 
Traveller, at Spottsylvania, among his advancing regiments, is 
grand. But Lee, writing to his faithful lieutenant, who had 
been wounded at Chancellorsville, " I congratulate you on the 
victory, which is due to your skill and energy," is grander still. 
Lee, as described at the Wilderness, again at the head of 
his advancing lines, but forced to retire from the front by his 
men (uneasy for his safety) with the assurance that if he 
would go the rear, they would go the front, is glorious ; but 
Lee, after the repulse at Gettysburg, saying: " All this is my 
fault," and assuming the responsibility for the reverse, is more 
glorious still — it is sublime, showing us how true greatness, 
generous and magnanimous, can bear itself in defeat. Lee's 
military genius is conceded, and he will unquestionably rank 
among the foremost captains of history ; but Lee's noble 
manhood exhibited in the hour of disaster at Appomattox, 
and in the subsequent days of adversity, is a priceless legacy, 
as an example far more valuable than his military renown, 

Lord Bacon has told us that success was the blessing of the 
Old Testament, but adversity that of the new ; and that the vir- 
tues of adversity are of a higher order than the virtues of success. 
While Washington represents in the history of this country 
the virtues of success, Lee represents the virtues of adversity. 
The classic matron was wont to study the lives of great 
heroes, hoping thus to transmit to her sons their virtues and 
their valor; and in one sense there was deep philosophy in 
the idea, as the mother must herself have become fully imbued 
with the spirit of those virtues she would impart to her son. 
In the case of Lee, both parents reverenced and venerated 
Washington, and the happiest of maternal influences presided 
over his infancy and youth. The love of the father for Wash- 
ington naturally impressed itself upon the son, who adopted 
him as the ideal of his youth, as the model by which he 






28 



sought to mould his own character. It is not surprising, 
therefore, that the good seed of Washington's example,-sown 
in such soil, should have yielded an abundant harvest of vir- 
tue and of valor; and that we should accordingly have, in 
Lee, a greater even than Washington for our matrons to 
admire and honor, and for our youth to imitate. 

Lee himself, then, is the choice fruit of Washington's ex- 
ample, and furnishes a distinguished illustration of the value 
rat exemplars in forming the character of youth. When 
we recollect that Lee, lavishly endowed by nature, was 
reared under these hallowed influences ; that duty (which he 
styled the sublimest word in our language) was the " key 
note" of his life, the pole-star of his every thought and 
action ; and that he was ever sustained by his religion in this 
unwavering and conscientious adherence through life to the 
call of duty, we recognize the presence of every essential 
for developing the most exalted of mankind. We had accord- 
ingly in Lee that rare combination, the highest order of genius, 
with the purest morality of its day; the supreme valor of an 
Alexander, with the unswerving justice of an Aristides ; the 
brilliant talents of a Caesar, with the stern virtues of a Cato ; 
the transcendent genius of a Napoleon, with the unselfish 
patriotism of a Washington : 

" A combination and a form indeed, 
Where every god did seem to set his seal, 
To give the world assurance of" a man." 

We have accordingly in Lee the last, Inst gift of the 
Mother of States and Statesmen, uniting the valor of the 
warrior with the gentleness of the woman ; the wisdom of 
the sage with the purity of the saint; the virtue of the 
patriot with the humility of the Christian; the brilliancy of 
genius with the simplicity of faith. We have accordingly in 
I the most perfect embodiment yet developed of the ideal 
manhood of our Christian civilization — nature, birth, home 
influence and social advantages, with his own aspirations for 
moral and Christian excellence, all combining most happily 
to produce in him the purest and greatest man of all the ages. 
May his grand character, as a bright example, a shining 
light, bless his countrymen to remotest generations. 



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>9jiTeura3Ci 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



013 744 646 7 ^J 



